Friday 30 March 2012 09.13 EDT
First published on Friday 30 March 2012 09.13 EDT

• A piece about the Bradford West byelection said that "the Muslim immigrant community" in the constituency had evidently decamped from Labour to vote for George Galloway. Such references in the article should simply have been to the Muslim community. The majority of Bradford's Muslims are second- or third-generation citizens born in Britain; a majority of the first generation are residents of many decades' standing. Elsewhere in the story, Labour's candidate was named as Imran Hussein, instead of Hussain (Galloway: 'we have won sensational political victory', 30 March, page 1, later editions).

• Caroline Thomson, the BBC's chief operating officer and a contender for the post of director general, was described by the author of a profile as "comprehensive-educated". In fact she was a pupil of the Mary Datchelor girls' school in Camberwell, London, a voluntary-aided grammar school (After 90 years, is the BBC about to get its first female director general?, 26 March, page 11).

•Criminal Cases Review Commission must be reformed, say campaigners was amended because one of the people mentioned in the piece, Michael Zander, said it was wrong to describe him as among those people with "concerns about the CCRC". He said he does not have concerns, and said that overreliance on paper analysis of the evidence is not a criticism he has regarding the CCRC.